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Literary criticism-TERMINOLOGY

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jasontraves | 21:51 Sat 11th Feb 2006 | Arts & Literature
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What is the term for when a storm builds to reflect the rising tension in the text? Or for example if it constantly rains when a charater is very sad? (when the weather reflects the mood). I don't think it is pathetic fallacy as that is more to do with giving the weather human emotions eg. 'angry clouds'

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I'm pretty sure it is still pathetic fallacy.

The answer from paddy_36 is fairly appropriate, however other terms that can give expansion to that thought are:


Simile: Simple substituion of a genre of occurences to relate to other other occurrences, especially if specifically connected with words such as "like" or "similar".
Allegory: Use of abstract, seemingly unrealted events to establish tones in a work.
Allusion: Relating to the unfamiliar to draw attention to or emphasize the familiar. (Analogy also, when constructed appropriately, conveys the same feeling)...




http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/


The 'Key Facts' section of the guides this site refers to foreshadowing as a literary device. Pathetic fallacy is probably correct too.

I would agree with pathetic fallacy ' the presentation of natural events and objects as controlled by human emotions, so that in some way they express human sorrow or joy (�a brave little snowdrop�; �the heavens smiled on our enterprise�). The phrase was coined by the English critic John Ruskin in Modern Painters (1843�60), to describe the ascription of human feelings to the outside world' courtesy of Tiscali reference!
But for some reason the phrase pathetic sympathy seems to jump in my head at the same time - some long past echo from my english teacher perhaps! Cant find it anywhere else, but he was quite a Classicist and knew his stuff

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